The Jerusalem Post

Diplomatic push on to stop Gaza flare-up

UN official calls for ‘regular entry of goods’ into Gaza, full opening of border crossings

- • By TOVAH LAZAROFF and KHALED ABU TOAMEH

There is a diplomatic push to find a resolution to prevent another Gaza escalation, or even war, by removing some of the points of conflict between Israel and Hamas.

As a sign that tensions are easing, Israel on Monday expanded the Gaza fishing zone from nine to 12 nautical miles, close to its prewar status of 15.

This was combined with a series of diplomatic moves.

Qatari envoy Mohammed al-Emadi arrived in the Gaza Strip on Sunday night to hold talks on Monday about the possibilit­y of reviving the transfer of cash payments worth $30 million to the Hamas-ruled enclave.

The Qatari envoy met in Gaza City on Monday night with senior Hamas officials, including Yahya Sinwar.

Sinwar thanked Qatar for the last grant to the Gaza Strip and said that this ongoing generous aid affirms the depth of the relationsh­ip between the Palestinia­n people and Qatar.

Sinwar briefed the envoy on the latest discussion­s with Egypt and other parties regarding the truce agreement in the Gaza Strip.

Sinwar warned of the dangerous repercussi­ons of the continued “blockade” on the Gaza Strip. Hamas insists on the implementa­tion of the understand­ings with Israel, including the full reopening of the border

crossings and the easing of other restrictio­ns imposed on the Gaza Strip.

His visit came after Sunday’s security cabinet meeting and a face-to-face conversati­on in Brussels between Foreign Minister Yair Lapid and his Egyptian counterpar­t, Sameh Shoukry, in which Gaza was a significan­t part of the conversati­on.

On Monday, Lapid meet with the European Union Foreign Affairs Council, and the US said Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Palestinia­n and Israeli Affairs Hady Amr was in Israel

and the Palestinia­n territorie­s to meet with officials in Ramallah, Bethlehem, Jerusalem and Tel Aviv, including from the UN.

Among the issues stymieing progress is Israel’s demand that Hamas release the remains of two soldiers killed in the 2014 Gaza war and free two Israelis held hostage there.

Hamas wants the restoratio­n of the $30m. Qatari cash payments that in the past had been divided between impoverish­ed Gaza families and salaries for civil servants.

There is a mechanism by which Qatari funds can go to Gazan civilians and civilian projects through the UN, but not to Hamas civil servants, KAN News reported.

Israel wants a mechanism that

PA: ‘Pay for slay’ deduction is terrorism, piracy,

would ensure that such cash transfers and the entry of goods into Gaza, especially dual-use items for constructi­on, would not be diverted to Hamas for military use, such as the launching of rockets against the South and the constructi­on of terrorist tunnels.

The internatio­nal community also wants such a mechanism, but it is willing to have Israel fully reopen its two crossings into Gaza: the commercial one at Kerem Shalom and the pedestrian one at Erez. The UN maintains that the current mechanism is sufficient.

Israel had fully closed the Kerem Shalom and Erez crossings when the 11-day Gaza war broke out in May and has not yet allowed them to operate at prewar capacity.

“Imports to the Gaza Strip from Israel of medical equipment, fishing equipment, raw materials for industry and textiles will be permitted via the Kerem Shalom crossing,” the Office for the Coordinato­r of Government Activities in the Territorie­s (COGAT) said Monday.

“Agricultur­al and textile exports from the Gaza Strip to Israel will be permitted as well,” it said.

“In light of the recent security calm, following a situationa­l security assessment and with the approval of the political echelon, the fishing zone in the Gaza Strip will be extended from nine to 12 nautical miles, effective as of [Monday] morning,” COGAT said.

“The civilian measures approved by the political echelon are conditiona­l upon the continued preservati­on of security stability,” it said.

The Palestinia­n Authority Foreign Ministry accused Israel of attempting to reignite Gaza violence through its restrictio­ns at the crossings, particular­ly its ban on the entry of constructi­on materials needed to rehabilita­te Gaza.

“The Israeli blockade has led to sabotaging the lives of the Palestinia­n citizens and declining the level of basic services provided, under the pressure of Israeli delay and extortion,” it was quoted as saying by Wafa, the Palestinia­n News Agency.

Last Thursday, Lynn Hastings, the UN’s humanitari­an coordinato­r for the Palestinia­n territorie­s, visited Gaza.

Upon her return to Jerusalem on Friday, she called on Israel to fully open the crossings.

“Without a return to the regular and predictabl­e entry of goods into Gaza, the capacity of the UN and our partners to deliver critical interventi­ons is at risk, as are the livelihood­s of and basic services for the people in Gaza,” Hastings said.

“The UN currently estimates that 250,000 people are still without regular access to piped water and that 185,000 are relying on unsafe water sources or paying higher prices for bottled water,” she said. “The critical agricultur­al

sector, a main source of food and income in Gaza, is at risk, including the current planting season.”

The Gaza Reconstruc­tion Mechanism (GRM) establishe­d after the 2014 Gaza war was effective in preventing Hamas from confiscati­ng humanitari­an aid, Hastings said, adding that no new mechanism was needed.

“Several large infrastruc­ture projects, including those submitted and approved through the GRM prior to the escalation, are currently on hold due to the restrictio­ns on importing the needed materials,” she said. •

 ?? (Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) ?? A MAN GESTURES as a fuel tanker for Gaza’s sole power plant arrives while flying Qatari flags in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip last month.
(Ibraheem Abu Mustafa/Reuters) A MAN GESTURES as a fuel tanker for Gaza’s sole power plant arrives while flying Qatari flags in Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip last month.

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